Friday, October 12, 2018

Early Christianity on: The Perfect Goodness of God the Father (Full Script)

Too lazy to read?  Watch the video!
www.youtube.com/watch?v=18wF8nkKRcU


Early Christianity on the Perfect Goodness of God the Father
Post-Apostolic Church

INTRO
This is the eighth video in a series on what the Pre-Nicene Christians believed about the Divinity.  And this is the fifth video about God the Father.

When something is good, it could also be called virtuous, morally right, and righteous.  What are some of the virtues that display goodness?  Good virtues include love, kindness, grace, mercy, patience, generosity, compassion.  Of course, good is the opposite of anything that is evil or bad.  A common belief in Christianity is that God is good by His nature.  And unlike mankind, God is perfectly good.

What have we heard about God’s goodness?  Some might say, “God is good all of the time.”  Others might say, “God is good only to those He loves.”  Others might say, “God is perfectly good because He Himself is the definition of goodness.”  Others, for various reasons, might say, “God is not or cannot be good.”  For example, some might say, “If God is perfectly just, then He cannot be perfectly good.”

PRE-NICENE CHRISTIANS: GOD IS GOOD AT ALL TIMES
The early Christians believed that God is so perfectly good that He takes no action that is not intended for good.  Ireaneus wrote,

For with God there is nothing without purpose or due significance.  (Irenaeus.  AD 180.  ANF, vol 1, page 493.)

They also believed that God is so perfectly good that there is no time when God is not doing good.  Referring to the seventh day of creation, Clement of Alexandria wrote,

God’s resting is not, then, as some conceive, that God ceased from doing.  For, being good, if He should ever cease from doing good, then would He cease from being God, which it is sacrilege even to say.  (Clement of Alexandria.  AD 195.  ANF, vol 2, page 513.)

These are just a couple of statements that summarize what the Pre-Nicene Christians believed about God’s perfect goodness.

PRE-NICENE CHRISTIANS: GOD IS GOOD AND JUST
One of the reasons someone might believe that God is not perfectly good is because they question why a good God would allow suffering in the world or allow someone to go to hell.  The conversation about God being perfectly good and perfectly just will probably continue to the end of time.  For the early Christians, they understood that God can be perfectly good, like a good father, and perfectly just, like a good master.  They did not see these attributes of God as being opposed to each other but as going hand-in-hand.  Tertullian admirably wrote,

What, if He did not threaten?  Will you call this justice an evil, when it is all unfavorable to evil?  Will you deny it to be a good, when it has its eye towards good?  What sort of being would you to wish God to be?  Would it be right to prefer that He should be such, that sins might flourish under Him, and the devil make mockery at Him?  Would you suppose Him to be a good God, who should be able to make a man worse by [proposing] security in sin?  Who is the author of good, but He who also requires it?...  God is wholly good, because in all things He is on the side of good….  Thus far, then, justice is the very fullness of the Deity Himself, manifesting God as both a perfect father and a perfect master: a father in His mercy, a master in His discipline; a father in the mildness of His power, a master in its severity; a father who must be loved with dutiful affection, a master who must needs be feared; be loved, because He prefers mercy to sacrifice; be feared because He dislikes sin; be loved, because He prefers the sinner’s repentance to his death; be feared, because He dislikes the sinners who do not repent.  Accordingly, the divine law commands duties in respect of both these attributes: You shall love God, and You shall fear God.  (Tertullian.  AD 207.  ANF, vol 3, page 308.)

Lactantius said a similar thing, writing,

Let no one, induced by the empty talking of the philosophers, train himself to the contempt of God, which is the greatest impiety.  We all are bound both to love Him, because He is our Father; and to revere Him, because He is our Lord: both to pay Him honor, because He is generous; and to fear Him, because He is severe: each character in Him is worthy of reverence.  (Lactantius.  AD 310.  ANF, vol 7, page 279.)

SCRIPTURES: GOD IS GOOD AT ALL TIMES
What do the Scriptures say about God’s perfect goodness?  Irenaeus said that every action of God is intended for good.  God said to the Jews in captivity, which is also true for everyone,

I will devise for you a device for peace, and not evil, to bestow upon you these good things.  And when you pray to Me, and I will hearken [listen] to you.  And when you earnestly seek Me, and you shall find Me.  For you shall seek me with your whole heart, and I will appear to you.  (Jeremiah 29:11-14 (Brenton) (LXX: Jeremiah 36:11-14))

Why would a perfectly good God want the best for us?  As the apostle John wrote,

God is love.  (1John 4:8)

How can God be anything less than perfectly good when He Himself is the definition and essence of love?

Clement of Alexandria said that God never rested from doing good, otherwise, He would cease being God.  When the Jews began persecuting Jesus because he worked on the Sabbath and did not rest from His work, Jesus told them,

My Father is still working, and I am working also.  (John 5:17)

There was never a day when God rested from working for the good of everyone and everything.

SCRIPTURES: GOD IS GOOD AND JUST
God is so perfectly good, this is actually the reason why God is also just, hating evil.  It is amazing how so many passages show God’s goodness while also connecting it to God’s justice.  As the following Scriptures will show, one cannot separate God’s perfect goodness from His justice.

His eye is too pure to behold evil doings, and to look upon grievous afflictions.  (Habbakkak 1:13 (Brenton))

When Moses went up Mount Sinai to receive the stone tablets, God came down, stood with him, and passed in front of him.  What did God say about Himself in that moment?

The Lord God, pitiful [compassionate] and merciful, longsuffering and compassionate [full of mercy], and true, and keeping justice and mercy for thousands, taking away iniquity, and unrighteousness, and sins; and [but] He will not clear the guilty; bringing the iniquity of the fathers upon the children, and to the children’s children, to the third and fourth generation.  (Exodus 34:6-7 (Brenton))

Moses also wrote,

As for God, His works are true, and all his ways are judgment [just]: God is faithful, and there is no unrighteousness in Him; just and holy is the Lord.  (Deuteronomy 32:4 (Brenton))

CONCLUSION
So which attribute of God is stronger?  His goodness or His justice?  This is really a silly question because it is impossible for these two attributes to be separated.  If God was not good, then He would have no sense of justice.  If God was not just, then He would not be perfectly good.  It is impossible to separate the two.  If someone understands God having one attribute without the other, then I would ask the same question as Tertullian: “What sort of being would YOU to wish God to be?”

And so if God is both good and just and we should imitate God, can we be both good and just?  Consider these Scriptures.

We have hated evil, and loved good: and restored judgment in the gates; that the Lord God Almighty may have mercy on the remnant of Joseph.  (Amos 5:15 (Brenton))

You give a tenth of mint, rue, and every kind of herb, [yet you have neglected the more important matters of the law—justice, mercy, and faith], and you bypass justice and love for God.  These things you should have done without neglecting the others.  (Luke 11:42 [and Matthew 23:23])

Has it not been told to you, O man, what is good? or what does the Lord require of you? but to do justice, and love mercy, and be ready to walk with the Lord your God.  (Micah 6:8 (Brenton))

Blessings and so forth.